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Specialized fluorescence microscopy movies show clathrin traveling on microtubules near surface of living cells They look like soccer balls -- only much smaller. They are tiny transport vehicles used by cells to import biological cargo and, for the first time, Rockefeller University researchers h...

Phage may be new therapeutic target A strep-infected child in a daycare center plays with a toy, puts it in her mouth and crawls away. Another child plays with the same toy and comes down with strep. Until now, scientists thought that disease-causing bacteria left on the toy was the culprit in tr...

In male fruit flies, fertility requires it; Trigger for release of "beastly caspases" also identified Since discovering that body cells actively commit suicide over 35 years ago, scientists have come to learn that this natural process, called programmed cell death, occurs throughout human tissues...

Rockefeller researcher proposes "death code" for cells Using laboratory cultures of human leukemia cells and the tails of tadpoles, a Rockefeller University researcher has shown that specialized proteins in the cell nucleus contain chemical flags that provide a "code" that spells death. The findi...

Voltage-dependent channel structure reveals masterpiece responsible for all nerve, muscle activity Scientists studying the tiny devices — called voltage-dependent ion channels — that are responsible for all nerve and muscle signals in living organisms for 50 years have been working like a bun...

Four gene "micronet" found to regulate social behavior in female mice What do the brain, ovaries and nose have in common? According to new research from The Rockefeller University, these three organs help orchestrate the complex behavior called social recognition in female mice through the intera...

A new survey can quickly test for addiction to cocaine, heroin and alcohol simply by asking about the time in the person's life when he or she was drinking or using these substances the most, according to a study by Rockefeller University researchers. In the five-minute survey, only three answers...

Researchers develop new conceptual tool for describing ecological communities Ever since Charles Darwin wrote one of the first descriptions of a food web — outlining who eats whom — in 1838, biologists such as Rockefeller scientist Joel E. Cohen, Ph.D., Dr.P.H., have been studying patterns of e...

Experts on stress will speak on April 29, at Rockefeller Univ. lecture for public Car alarms. Traffic jams. Job layoffs. These almost daily events are among the reasons that New Yorkers often feel stressed out. But while many people can identify what triggers their stress, they may not understand...

Dendritic cells, discovered at Rockefeller in 1973, now a vehicle for immune-based therapies For the critical discovery of the immune system's sentinel dendritic cells, and for demonstrating that science can fruitfully harness the power of these cells and other components of the immune system to ...